CHROMOSOMAL DAMAGE
We have one final myth to discuss: the idea that LSD
will break chromo somes. This concern, based on scanty
research, was raised during the 1960s. While women who used LSD during pregnancy
have given birth to children with
birth defects, this rate is not higher than that of the general population. Furthermore, most of these women also
used other drugs during pregnancy.
Most animal research has not shown remarkable effects of LSD on the developing fetus. Some concern about the effects
of LSD goes back historically to the
widespread use of related ergot alkaloids to induce abortion. However, LSD itself does not have this effect. Never‑
theless,
women who are pregnant, or who might be, should avoid drugs in general.
DEATH
Conventional LSD-like
hallucinogens are fairly unlikely to produce serious physical effects. However, some newer and
fortunately rare designer hallucinogens have blurred the lines between
stimulants and hallucinogens. For
example, one of these-25I-NBOMe, 4-lodo-2,5-dimethoxy-N-(2- methoxybenzyl) phenethylamine—has been reported to
cause deaths. This drug and some like
it sometimes are marketed as bath salts, and sometimes as LSD. 'The particular problem with this drug is its
extraordinary potency: like LSD, it
has big effects at very small doses. This drug and several close relatives may represent serious risks to human users,
but almost nothing is known about
them.
lhe belladonna alkaloids represent a particular
danger. These drugs prevent the action
of one of the major neurotransmitters in the body (acetylcholine) at many of its synapses. At doses that cause
hallucinations, they increase heart
rate and body temperature to dangerous levels: death can result. It is important to understand that
there is not a dose that produces
significant behavioral effects that is not toxic: the behavioral effects, like delirium, are signs of overdose. These
effects are easily treated by medical
personnel if they know what the intoxicating drug is. Therefore, it is extremely important to seek medical
attention.
PCP also can cause dangerous side effects or death
from overdose (two to five times a single recreational dose). As the user
increases the dose, general
anesthesia can result (remember, this was the reason the drug was invented). However, a number of dangerous
effects occur after high doses, any one of which can be lethal. Body
temperature can rise to 108 degrees
Fahrenheit, blood pressure can rise so much that a stroke occurs, breathing can cease, or a prolonged period of
seizure activity can result. PCP can
also cause a prolonged state resembling paranoid schizo h e nia. This most often happens in people who use PCP
for a long time; however, an abnormal psychiatric state that persists for days
can result from a single use. The
acute delirium caused by PCP or ketamine can be alleviated with benzodiazepine drugs, such as Valium.